| Brandy Is Dandy, Makes Vicar Go Quicker: "See How They Run," at the Playcrafters Barn Theatre through September 20 |
|
| Theatre - Reviews | |||
| Written by Mike Schulz | |||
| Monday, 14 September 2009 06:00 | |||
|
Yes, the show is a classic farce. First produced in 1944, British author Philip King's beloved slapstick ran for a year and a half in London's legendary Comedy Theatre, has enjoyed numerous revivals since its debut, and routinely pops up in community-, regional-, and educational-theatre seasons on both sides of the Atlantic. (Playcrafters itself last produced the show in 1981). Yes, this farce involves mistaken identities. Hoo boy, does it involve mistaken identities. But for its new incarnation by director Tom Swegle, who also helmed Playcrafters' 1981 version, See How They Run doesn't feature slamming doors, but rather slamming door. Of the five ground-floor doors on Chuck Walters' imaginatively designed set, only one - the closet's - shuts with the satisfying smack! you'd expect from a farce of this type. The two center-stage doors at the rear of the set open and close with a delicate click!, and the two positioned at the theatre's side aisles not only don't slam; they don't latch. They're swinging doors that make no sound whatsoever. (And, in truth, they're not even doors; they're suggested doors, built approximately waist-high - like silent subway turnstiles that turn both ways.)
In a nutshell (because out of the nutshell would take too damned long), See How They Run concerns the British vicar Lionel Toop (Mike Kelly), his American wife Penelope (Jaci Weigandt), and the confusion that results when a few too many individuals begin appearing in the reverend's home dressed in clerical robes. By the climax, characters have been liquored up, knocked unconscious, stashed in closets, threatened by a vicious Russian, and chased through the house in their underwear, and the play's title has proved completely fitting: When these folks run, they run. (Before Friday's show, Swegle instructed our audience to avoid using the aisles mid-performance, as we could easily be mowed down. He wasn't kidding.) As I've repeated ad nauseam, I'm not the ideal audience for this sort of thing. Much as I'm practiced in the suspension of disbelief, it still drives me absolutely batty when farcical characters can't see or hear people standing three feet away from them, or recover from massive head injuries and falling-down-drunkenness in mere minutes, or engage in flippant witticisms at gunpoint - genre details you're forced to accept for full enjoyment of King's outing.
Best of all, See How They Run finds a bunch of Playcrafters veterans - among them Kelly (reprising his 1981 role with infectious relish), Weigandt, Betts, Hazen (performing exquisite double-takes), Vicki Deusinger, Kevin Brake, and Greg Cripple (more assured, and funnier, than I've yet seen him) - having a marvelous time playing an assortment of eccentrics and dipsticks. Their committed, endearingly goofy portrayals elicited the biggest laughs I've heard in the venue since ... jeez, I can't even think since when. And particular praise is due to Workman, whose fearless comic bravado and impressive singing voice make you immediately eager for his next stage appearance (in a musical comedy, hopefully?), and to the beaming Lisa Kahn, whose Cockney maid Ida delivers a wonderful blend of sensibility, flightiness, and hilarious asides. Addressing herself in the mirror, Kahn's servant says, "The trouble wiv you, Ida, is you 'aven't got no oomph." She's such a liar.
For tickets and information, call (309)762-0330 or visit Playcrafters.com.
|